Carland v. Feller

31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 24, 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 321
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 24 (Carland v. Feller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carland v. Feller, 31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 24, 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 321 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

KINKADE, J.

This case is in this court for the third time. At the first trial of the case a verdict was directed for the defendant on'the motion of the defendant, and error was prosecuted to that action of the court below, and that judgment of the court of common pleas was reversed for two reasons: first, for excluding evidence relative to whether the company had or had not a rule governing how the work should be done; and, second, for having directed the verdict. That went to the Supreme Court and was dismissed in the Supreme Court, as we understand, on the ground that the plaintiff in error did not file a supersedeas bond. The case was retried in the common pleas court and a verdict of $5,000 recovered by the plaintiff. That case came to this court on error and was affirmed by a majority of the court; then proceeded to the [25]*25Supreme Court, and was reversed and remanded. The case was again tried and the plaintiff recovered $10,000, and that is the case now here in which the plaintiff in error, Carland & Company, seeks to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas.

The record is not long; presents less than 100 pages. It would not be accurate to say that the court had committed 100 pages, but it would be entirely accurate to say that all the members of this court are so familiar with every page of the 100 pages that we eould stand any kind of an examination on this record. We have read the whole evidence and read it with care. The plaintiff in this case sought to recover principally upon two grounds: First, that the defendant had employed and kept in their employ a man by the name of Pete Eekebaum who was entirely incompetent to do that which he was employed to do; and second, that the company had no rule directing how this dangerous work of blasting should be done, and consequently that they were negligent in that regard. The petition and the supplement to the petition contained the allegations of course that no notice was given, when notice should have been, given before the blast was fired and so forth, and sets up also the insufficiency of force that the defendant had employed, and other things, but the principal grounds relied upon for the recovery and submitted to the jury at the time of the trial in the court below were the known, incompetency of the employe, Pete Eckebaum, and the failure to have any rule.

It will be observed upon reading this petition that neither the petition nor the supplement to the petition states that the plaintiff, John Feller, did not know of the incompeteney of Eekebaum, nor does it state that he did not know that the company had no rule, nor does it state that he had not equal means of knowing with the employer. Our attention has not been called to this feature of the case by counsel, but in examining the pleadings we notice this to be true. We also notice in the record that when evidence was offered to prove that the company had no rule, that it was objected to and was admitted over objection. The court is unanimously of the opinion that the evidence was not competent; there being no allegation in, the petition or the [26]*26supplement to the petition that the plaintiff did not know this fact, and the evidence being objected to when offered, the court is unanimously of the opinion that that evidence was not competent and should not have been admitted, and that no recovery should be based upon that feature of the case.

We then come to the question of the incompetency of the man Eckebaum. It must be conceded that there is some evidence in the case tending to show the ineompetency of Eckebaum, to wit, the statements of witnesses that he did not always at first understand what was said to him, and that at times they would have to tell him once or twice or more before he would distinctly understand what he was to do; and also the statement' of Mr. Brenkamp that on the day of the accident he called to him as he was about to throw the lever, admonishing him not to throw it because it would result in injury to the men who were in the cut and were not prepared for the blast to be fired, which he did not hear, or if he did hear, apparently paid no heed to. Of course, it is possible that it may have been said at such a time as that he could not heed it, that he had not time to comprehend it before he threw the lever; may have been said simultaneously with the throwing of the lever; but a fair construction of the evidence is that it was prior to that and no heed paid to it. So there was some evidence to submit to a jury on the question whether this man was incompetent to do that class of work.

The serious question in this case is whether this man was when doing that particular act inside or outside the scope of his employment. Counsel realize that, and the question has been presented to us with force, not only in argument but in the briefs, and as I have said, we have examined the record with great care in that regard. I am not going to take the time to go through the record in detail, but I will state our conclusion of what this record states unmistakably in, some respects. In the first place, there is not a syllable of testimony in this record anywhere that anybody ever told Pete Eckebaum to pull a lever; not a syllable. All there is on the subject in the record is practically to the contrary. When witnesses are asked whether any instruction was given to Eckebaum or to Flynn as to what Eckebaum should do, they say no instructions. It is conceded [27]*27that Mr. Flynn was an entirely competent blaster; had worked for years, perhaps eight or ten years at the business, and was competent in every regard to do everything connected with the blasting. This man Pete was sent to-him by the superior of Flynn as a helper, without any instructions as to what his duties should include. Mr. Flanagan says he gave Flynn no instructions, and he gave Pete no instructions as to what he should do. He sent him to Flynn because Flynn asked for him and he worked there some months, perhaps four months all told, with Mr. Flynn and the predecessors of Mr. Flynn in the blasting situation. As I have said, the record contains not a syllable from anybody that anyone ever heard Flynn or any other person tell Eekebaum to pull a lever. So that if Eckebaum was authorized to pull the lever at the time and pulled it, it must be determined from the course of conduct in which he was engaged. Of course, it will not be contended that he might not have been authorized otherwise than by direct instructions to pull the lever, because if he was continually, or very frequently, pulling the lever, the jury might have a right to infer that somebody had instructed him, although no one could say in behalf of the plaintiff that anyone had so instructed him.

There being nothing in the record to the effect that anybody ever told Eekebaum to pull the lever, we are brought to the question whether his conduct indicates that he was in the habit of pulling the lever or firing the blast, and in this regard it is said in the brief of counsel for defendant in error that the record clearly shows that Pete Eckebaum was in the habit of pulling the lever and firing the blast. It may be said that no one can find a syllable in this record, other than the single statement on page 23, touching this subject. On that page of the record, this question is put to Mr. Brencamp, who was a driller and who was the man who said to Pete, “For God’s sake, don’t fire, you will kill somebody,” or words to that effect. This quesion was put to Mr. Brencamp:

“Did you see this man Pete operate the lever to the battery prior to the day on which the blast was fired that injured Feller ? A. Yes, sir.”

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 24, 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carland-v-feller-ohcirctlucas-1909.